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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Unique Impression
This is the first and best of the series. It introduces the eclectic group of servants of the unlucky house: the resourceful ring-leader of a butler, Rainbird, sympathetic and downtrodden Lizzy, and the effeminate, vain Joseph, and the rest.

Fiona Sinclair, taken from an orphanage to be raised and educated as a lady for her benefactor's dubious purposes, is accustomed...

Published on March 15, 2002

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An easy, fast historical love story.
I enjoyed this novel, along with all of the other "A House for the Season" novels I have read. The plot and characters were simple but the story was amusing and uplifting. I was able to read The Miser of Mayfair in one night and despite the simplistic nature of the novel, I was not disappointed in the experience.
Published on February 25, 1999


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Unique Impression, March 15, 2002
By A Customer
This is the first and best of the series. It introduces the eclectic group of servants of the unlucky house: the resourceful ring-leader of a butler, Rainbird, sympathetic and downtrodden Lizzy, and the effeminate, vain Joseph, and the rest.

Fiona Sinclair, taken from an orphanage to be raised and educated as a lady for her benefactor's dubious purposes, is accustomed to using her wile and cunning to dodge the exploiters and schemers of her day. Usually, she gets the upper hand until she meets Lord Harrington. His aloof manner and haughty views leave him the only man in London society impervious to her extraordinary beauty, or so it seems. To that end, he is the only one who does not want to exploit her. To Fiona, for this reason, he is the only man who will do.

For an orphan of questionable birth, albeit a beautiful one, to ensnare an autocratic Lord who is rich and handsome would require a miracle, one which the servants of the House on Clarges Street are all too ready to manufacture- a plan to make this arrogant Lord see the beauty of Fiona's heart.

This novel plays out like a situated comedy much like Chesney's others with the same twists and turns, yet with the undertone of sweet melancholy unique only to this book. Fiona appears to be too wily and stoic at first to deserve such fortune until she ventures to risk everything by revealing her heart. Miser of Mayfair portrays the harshness of Regency society and the triumph of those who gamble and win, weaving not only a poignant love story, but more, a lasting impression.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An easy, fast historical love story., February 25, 1999
By A Customer
I enjoyed this novel, along with all of the other "A House for the Season" novels I have read. The plot and characters were simple but the story was amusing and uplifting. I was able to read The Miser of Mayfair in one night and despite the simplistic nature of the novel, I was not disappointed in the experience.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars delightful "downstairs" Regency......, February 25, 2008
another enjoyable addition to Marion Chesney's long list of funny, witty, and romantic "old school" style Regency romances.

The quite different but very entertaining aspect of this book, and this series, is that half of the story is about the servants in the house that has been let. Miss Chesneys forte' of introducing complex and fun secondary characters shines in this book. Chesney's subtle wit is present in both the upper echelon and the staff. I look forward to reading future books of this series to learn more of the servants "Upstairs, Downstairs" misadventures.

As to the romance in this story. Fiona was a great heroine-a foundling who learned quickly in life to hide her intelligence, because society frowns upon "bluestockings", and the good hearted albeit snobbish Earl an excellent change of pace.

Another great novel by Chesney and highly recommended. 5 stars.
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4.0 out of 5 stars enjoyable, February 9, 2011
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When I saw how short the book seemed compared to some other romances I read, I thought that perhaps the book was volume one of a single story. This story definitely ends, but from what other reviews say of subsequent books, the house and the servants are the same in throughout the series.

For the most part, I really enjoyed this story. You really wonder about Fiona, the heroine, and don't have her totally figured out until pretty late in the book. That is unusual and makes for interesting reading in and of itself. I definitely found the story entertaining, and plan to try the second book in this series. However, I did find it difficult to relate to or admire Fiona, when she is a bit of a deceitful person. I had a similar difficulty with the Earl at times, and with the morality of the book here and there.

I totally agree with another reviewer's post that it is interesting to see what is going on both above-stairs and below-stairs in the story!
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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars It was good, but the heroine was too much like her others., March 31, 1999
By A Customer
I liked these books. The only problem I have with them, is that the heroines are always absolutely gorgeous, with a rich Lord hanging around in the background who just can't seem to get her out of his mind. She gets into trouble, he rescues her, she turns him down because she doesn't think she's good enough for him, or he's good enough for her. Very good light reading, and a pleasure, but not up to the Gone with The Wind class by a lot.
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Miser of Mayfair (G. K. Hall Nightingale Series Edition)
Miser of Mayfair (G. K. Hall Nightingale Series Edition) by M. C. Beaton (Paperback - Apr. 1987)
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